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Strong Body, Healthy Mind

Program Title: "Strong Body,Healthy Mind: A Himalayan Health Adventure"

Overall Vision: To empower children with essential, practical health knowledge that is immediately applicable to their high-altitude environment, respecting their cultural and monastic traditions.

Target Audience: School-aged children (approx. 6-14 years) in monastic and government schools. Duration: 1 Full Day (e.g., 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM) Location: School grounds or monastery courtyard.

Guiding Principles for the Program:

1. Respectful Integration: Acknowledge and respect Buddhist principles. Frame health not just as a physical goal, but as a way to care for the "vessel" that carries the mind towards enlightenment and compassion.

2. Practical & Local: Focus on skills that use locally available resources. Avoid recommending expensive or inaccessible products.

3. Interactive & Fun: Use games, demonstrations, and hands-on activities rather than long lectures. Learning by doing is key.

4. Sustainability: Leave behind simple visual aids (posters) and train a local teacher/monk/nun to continue the lessons.

Proposed Schedule & Activities
9:00 AM - 9:30 AM: Opening Ceremony & Icebreaker

· Welcome: Traditional welcome (e.g., with a white scarf - Khata if appropriate).

· Introduction: Brief explanation of the day's goal: to learn how to keep our bodies and minds strong.

· Icebreaker Game - "Health Wave": Everyone stands in a circle. The leader calls out a health action (e.g., "brush your teeth!", "wash your hands!", "drink water!"). Everyone performs the action together. This is fun and energizing.

9:30 AM - 10:30 AM: Session 1 - The Guardians of Health: Clean Hands & Healthy Teeth (This session uses demonstrable, concrete actions.)

· Activity A: Glitter Germ Attack!

  · Concept: How germs spread and why handwashing is crucial.

  · Demo: Put a little glitter (representing germs) on one child's hand. Have them shake hands with another child. Watch how the "germs" spread. This visual is incredibly effective.

· Activity B: The Perfect Handwashing Song

  · Teach: The WHO-recommended steps for handwashing.

  · Action: Use a bucket, clean water, and local soap. Teach them to scrub for 20 seconds (the time it takes to sing the "Happy Birthday" song twice, or a simple, locally known mantra twice). (Om Ara Patsa Nadi)Have everyone practice.

· Activity C: Sparkling Smile Demo

  · Teach: The importance of cleaning teeth to avoid pain and difficulty eating.

  · Demo: Use a model (or a picture) of teeth and a toothbrush. Show correct brushing technique. If possible, distribute donated toothbrushes and toothpaste for practice (using water only).

10:30 AM - 10:45 AM: Nutritious Break

· Serve a healthy local snack: e.g., an apple, a handful of roasted soybeans, or a roti (flatbread). This is a demo itself for healthy eating.

10:45 AM - 12:00 PM: Session 2 - Fuel for the Body & Mind: Local Nutrition (Focus on making the most of local food sources.)

· Activity A: The Himalayan Food Rainbow

  · Concept: Eating a variety of foods for different nutrients.

  · Demo: Create a large poster with colored sections. Have children identify local foods and place them in the correct color group (e.g., Orange (Vitamin A): Carrots, Pumpkin | Green: Spinach, Local greens | White (Energy): Rice, Potatoes, Tsampa (barley flour) | Red: Apples, Tomatoes (if available)).

· Activity B: "Eat a Rainbow" Plate

  · Action: Give children paper plates and colored pencils. Ask them to draw a healthy meal they could eat using local foods from the rainbow.

12:00 PM - 1:00 PM: LUNCH BREAK

· Provide a healthy, balanced meal that exemplifies the "food rainbow" lesson. Eat together.

1:00 PM - 2:00 PM: Session 3 - Safety First: Mountain First Aid & Hydration (Critical for their remote environment.)

 Activity A: The Water Heroes

  · Concept: Why drinking clean water is especially important in dry, high-altitude climates to avoid dehydration.

  · Demo: Show simple water purification methods: boiling, filtering through a clean cloth, and solar disinfection (SODIS) in a plastic bottle if sunlight is strong.

· Activity B: Tiny Helpers - Basic First Aid

  · Teach: Very simple, essential skills.

  · Cuts & Scrapes: Demonstrate "Clean, Cover" with clean water and a bandage (clean cloth).

  · Stopping Nosebleeds: Lean forward, pinch the soft part of the nose.

  · Keeping Warm: Recognize the signs of being too cold (shivering) and the importance of dry layers.

2:00 PM - 2:45 PM: Session 4 - Healthy Mind, Happy Heart: Wellness & Mindfulness (This resonates deeply with monastic traditions.)

· Activity A: Belly Breathing for Calm(Meditation)

  · Concept: How breathing can calm nerves, help with focus, and manage big feelings (like anger or fear).

  · Action: Teach a simple breathing exercise: place hands on belly, breathe in slowly through the nose (feel the belly expand), breathe out slowly through the mouth (feel the belly fall). Practice together for 2 minutes.

· Activity B: Compassion and Kindness in Action

  · Concept: Mental health is tied to how we treat others and ourselves.

  · Action: Have each child think of one kind thing they can do for someone else that day. Discuss how helping others makes us feel good inside.

Activity C: Patience in Action 

2:45 PM - 3:00 PM: Closing Ceremony & Pledge

· Recap: Quickly review the 4 big lessons: Clean Hands, Good Food, Safe Water, and a Calm Mind.

· Health Warrior Pledge: Lead the children in a simple, fun pledge to practice what they learned (e.g., "I promise to be a Health Warrior! I will wash my hands, eat good food, drink clean water, and be kind!").

· Thank You & Distribution of "Health Warrior" Certificates: A simple certificate or a small token (like a pencil with a health message) makes the day memorable

Logistics & Materials Needed

· Local Liaison: A teacher or senior monk/nun must be involved from the planning stage to ensure cultural appropriateness.

· Translators: Health workers or volunteers fluent in the local language (e.g., Nepali, Tibetan, Lowa ) and dialect.

· Simple Materials:

  · Soap, buckets, towels, glitter.

  · Toothbrushes, toothpaste (if possible for demo).

  · Posters, markers, colored pencils, paper plates.

  · Examples of local foods.

  · First aid supplies for demo (clean cloth, bandages).

  · Certificates or small gifts for participants.

· Food & Water: Arrangements for providing a healthy lunch and snacks.

Post-Program Sustainability

1. Leave Behind: Laminated posters of the "Handwashing Steps," "Himalayan Food Rainbow," and "First Aid Tips" for the school.

2. Train the Trainer: Spend 30 minutes after the program with the teachers/monks, going over the key activities so they can repeat them.

3. Follow-Up: If possible, plan a brief follow-up visit or message in 3 months to check progress and answer questions.

This program is designed to be a joyful, engaging, and truly useful day that gives these children practical tools to improve their immediate and long-term health and wellbeing.

  1. By Wellness & Ecogaurd Nepal
  2. 7 April 2026

The Wheel of Life (Bhavacakra)

THE WHEEL OF LIFE.
Sipa Khorlo (སྲིད་པ་འཁོར་ལོ་) or bhavacakra is one of the most popular artistic creations in the Buddhist world.

The bhavachakra is painted on the outside walls of nearly every Tibetan Buddhist temple in Tibet and India, to instruct non-monastic audience about the Buddhist teachings.

The bhavachakra consists of the following elements:

1.The pig, rooster and snake in the hub of the wheel represent the three poisons of ignorance, attachment and aversion.

2.The second layer represents karma.

3.The third layer represents the six realms of samsara.

4.The fourth layer represents the twelve links of dependent origination.

5.The fierce figure holding the wheel represents impermanence. It is also Yama, the god of death.

6.The moon above the wheel represents liberation from samsara or cyclic existence.

7.The Buddha pointing to the white circle indicates that liberation is possible.

Symbolically, the three inner circles, moving from the center outward, show that the three poisons of ignorance, attachment, and aversion give rise to positive and negative actions; these actions and their results are called karma. Karma in turn gives rise to the six realms, which represent the different types of suffering within samsara.

The fourth and outer layer of the wheel symbolizes the twelve links of dependent origination; these links indicate how the sources of suffering—the three poisons and karma—produce lives within cyclic existence.

The fierce being holding the wheel represents impermanence; this symbolizes that the entire process of samsara or cyclic existence is impermanent, transient, constantly changing. The moon above the wheel indicates liberation. The Buddha is pointing to the moon, indicating that liberation from samsara is possible.

  1. By Wellness & Ecogaurd Nepal
  2. 7 April 2026

Community Health Awareness Program

Community Health Awareness Program 

Stroke

  1. By Wellness & Ecogaurd Nepal
  2. 7 April 2026

Plant a Tree Save the World

🌿 A Letter from the Heart: Let’s Green the Roof of the World Together

Dear Friends of world,

Namaste!

Imagine standing in Upper Mustang—where the wind carries whispers of ancient Tibetan culture, but the land bears scars of climate change. Barren slopes that once cradled life now beg for healing. At Wenepal, we’re rolling up our sleeves to answer that call, and we’d love your hand in this sacred mission.  

Why Trees? Why Now?

Every popular tree we plant in Mustang isn’t just a tree—it’s a shield against desertification, a cradle for biodiversity, and a love letter to future generations. With your support, we can:  

-Turn dust into forests: 3,000 native trees to anchor the soil and revive water sources.  

- Equip locals as Earth Guardians: Train 100+ villagers (especially women) in agroforestry.  

- Fight global warming locally: Each tree absorbs CO2, but here, it also preserves a vanishing way of life.  

Let’s Make Magic

We’re seeking Grant Amount $5000 to launch Phase 1. Attached is a blueprint—but think of it as a seed. With your nurture, it can blossom into:  

✔ A model climate-resilient zone for all the Himalayas.  

✔ A story we’ll tell grandchildren: “Remember when we brought Mustang back to life?”  

“Saving the planet one Himalayan village at a time.”

P.S. A Mustang elder once told me, “The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second-best time is today.” Let’s start planting.  

  1. By Wellness & Ecogaurd Nepal
  2. 7 April 2026

Universal Peace Puja

Lowo Monlam Chenmo for Universal Peace 

  1. By Wellness & Ecogaurd Nepal
  2. 7 April 2026

How To Offer Water Oblation

Water offering is basic practice in Buddhist

  1. By Wellness & Ecogaurd Nepal
  2. 7 April 2026